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Causeway Bike Path and Visitors Center Now Due in March

The target date for Ocean City's Route 52 reconstruction 'project closeout' is now mid-May.

 
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The new visitors center on the Route 52 causeway is 'basically complete,' according to the state Department of Transportation. But work on the access roadways continues and will push back the opening of the visitors center until sometime in March.
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The visitors center and the bicycle-pedestrian path along the reconstructed Route 52 causeway are now scheduled to open sometime in March, a state Department of Transportation spokesman said Friday.

The "final project closeout" is now targeted for mid-May, according to spokesman Joe Dee.

The two amenities are the final pieces of the most expensive bridge project New Jersey has ever completed: a six-year, $400 million replacement of the 2.2-mile causeway that serves as the main route into Ocean City for residents and visitors.

The project had originally been scheduled to finish by the end of the calendar year. But in December, officials had set a new target date of Jan. 31.

Superstorm Sandy on Oct. 29 had caused damage and delays as crews worked to restore a wetlands area below the new Ninth Street Bridge — using the new visitors center for access. That project and work to remove a temporary ramp are complete, and crews are now working to complete roadwork providing access to the visitors center.

Colored lighting on the supports below the bridge were recently added, providing an aesthetic and functional (markers for boat traffic) element to the project, Dee said. 

He said final costs for the project are not yet available, and he did not know if there would be penalties for the delays in the completion of the project.

The causeway opened to car traffic in May with two new towering fixed-span bridges and an elevated roadway connecting them. But construction crews have been continuing work on a new mid-causeway visitors center, fishing piers, boat ramps and the separated pedestrian/bicycle path. 

Michele Gillian, executive director of the Ocean Regional Chamber of Commerce, which will staff the new visitors center on the causeway, said in December that the Chamber had hoped to move in on March 1.

The Chamber will now hope for a move before Easter, which arrives early this year (March 31).

Gillian said the existing Welcome Center at Ninth Street and Simpson Avenue will remain open and provide the same services for at least six months as a transition.

Parts of the separate lane for bicycles and pedestrians have been open, and a new ramp that loops underneath the new bridge on the Somers Point side is also open. The ramp provides easy access to Bay Avenue without crossing the busy intersection at the end of the causeway.

Related Topics: Ocean City Regional Chamber of Commerce and Route 52 causeway

Fred Miller

9:00 am on Saturday, February 2, 2013

Where is the bronze plaque that was attached to the pillar at the entrance to the bridge? The following was engraved on the plaque: "WORLD WAR MEMORIAL BRIDGE, ERECTED 1933; IN COMMEMORATION OF THE VALOR AND SERVICE OF NEW JERSEY SOLDIERS AND SAILORS AND CITIZENS IN THE WORLD WAR."

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Al Makowski

9:34 am on Saturday, February 2, 2013

Fred, you are right.......Where is it?

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Edward Owen

12:05 pm on Saturday, February 2, 2013

That is a very good point, Fred. We'll see what happens in the coming months.

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Parker Miller

5:03 pm on Monday, February 4, 2013

The plaques were stolen. My understanding is that the OC Historic Museum asked for the plaques a year ago & were told they would receive them when the pillars were demolished, but they have now disappeared.

Carla Migliaccio

9:15 am on Saturday, February 2, 2013

Nice photos Doug, Thank you for the update!

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ken mccusker

12:02 pm on Saturday, February 2, 2013

Why wouldn't there be penalties it's part of the construction project when bid... Bonus if finished early and penalties if finished late.

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Edward Owen

12:02 pm on Saturday, February 2, 2013

This would be an awesome upgrade especially with the upcoming summer season and in the wake of Superstorm Sandy.

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Joan Farrell

10:07 pm on Saturday, February 2, 2013

Fred, they have a place to remount the plaque, near the new small pavilion that has the cap to old tower. We think they may be cleaning and refurbishing it. We hope this is true. Can't imagine them saving the tower cap and not replacing the plaque.

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Eleanor

6:16 am on Sunday, February 3, 2013

What was wrong with the existing visitors center at 9th and Simpson anyway? It was spacious, modern, had some parking and a big lot across the street that could be paved over for more parking. I could see if it was run down wanting to replace it but it was fine - why duplicate something at huge cost to the taxpayer when you have an existing visitors center less than a half mile down the road? Just to give out patronage jobs?

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Dan Brown

10:45 am on Sunday, February 3, 2013

The bridge is great, but I am curious to know who's idea it was to build the visitor center, and how much it cost. To add the foundation and access roads, it's a multimillion expense. My last question is, when's the last time you stopped at a visitor center? For me, not since the advent of the Internet. Sure hope the chamber likes their new office space.

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